My uncle tutors me in math.
Some movies I've seen that are set in Italy show a family outside all seated around a very large table. The joyous noise is overwhelming and the food is never ending.
People come out in spring and summer because there is a specialness in the air that's as aromatic as the food on the table. Celebrating each meal as though it was a feast (which it is in the hands of people like that), brings a rightness to everyone at the table, each as welcome as anyone else or they wouldn't be there.
So the reds or whites of the sauces, or the greens of the salads or the yellows of the cheeses, or the sparkling glasses holding the purest wine that can be afforded all blend in a dazzling mixture of blinding color the way an artist would put his colors onto his canvas.
We can infer that based on the excerpt , the most likely truth about ancient Greek marriage rituals is: The groom had to ask the bride’s parents for permission to marry her.
<h3>What is marriage ritual?</h3>
Marriage ritual actually refers to the way or pattern that marriages are conducted. They are seen as an order of marriage set up by men.
Below is the excerpt that completes the question:
Read the excerpt from "Perseus."
He waited beside her until the great snake came for its prey; then he cut its head off just as he had the Gorgon's. The headless body dropped back into the water; Perseus took Andromeda to her parents and asked for her hand, which they gladly gave him.
We see here that the answer is "The groom had to ask the bride’s parents for permission to marry her."
Learn more about marriage ritual on brainly.com/question/16956601
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Wasn't it Phillis Wheatley's "Poems on Various Subjects, Religious, and Moral"?